9,345 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
The role of HG in the analysis of temporal iteration and interaural correlation
Brain putamen volume changes in newly-diagnosed patients with obstructive sleep apnea.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is accompanied by cognitive, motor, autonomic, learning, and affective abnormalities. The putamen serves several of these functions, especially motor and autonomic behaviors, but whether global and specific sub-regions of that structure are damaged is unclear. We assessed global and regional putamen volumes in 43 recently-diagnosed, treatment-naïve OSA (age, 46.4 ± 8.8 years; 31 male) and 61 control subjects (47.6 ± 8.8 years; 39 male) using high-resolution T1-weighted images collected with a 3.0-Tesla MRI scanner. Global putamen volumes were calculated, and group differences evaluated with independent samples t-tests, as well as with analysis of covariance (covariates; age, gender, and total intracranial volume). Regional differences between groups were visualized with 3D surface morphometry-based group ratio maps. OSA subjects showed significantly higher global putamen volumes, relative to controls. Regional analyses showed putamen areas with increased and decreased tissue volumes in OSA relative to control subjects, including increases in caudal, mid-dorsal, mid-ventral portions, and ventral regions, while areas with decreased volumes appeared in rostral, mid-dorsal, medial-caudal, and mid-ventral sites. Global putamen volumes were significantly higher in the OSA subjects, but local sites showed both higher and lower volumes. The appearance of localized volume alterations points to differential hypoxic or perfusion action on glia and other tissues within the structure, and may reflect a stage in progression of injury in these newly-diagnosed patients toward the overall volume loss found in patients with chronic OSA. The regional changes may underlie some of the specific deficits in motor, autonomic, and neuropsychologic functions in OSA
Time-Domain Based Embeddings for Spoofed Audio Representation
Anti-spoofing is the task of speech authentication. That is, identifying
genuine human speech compared to spoofed speech. The main focus of this paper
is to suggest new representations for genuine and spoofed speech, based on the
probability mass function (PMF) estimation of the audio waveforms' amplitude.
We introduce a new feature extraction method for speech audio signals: unlike
traditional methods, our method is based on direct processing of time-domain
audio samples. The PMF is utilized by designing a feature extractor based on
different PMF distances and similarity measures. As an additional step, we used
filter-bank preprocessing, which significantly affects the discriminative
characteristics of the features and facilitates convenient visualization of
possible clustering of spoofing attacks. Furthermore, we use diffusion maps to
reveal the underlying manifold on which the data lies.
The suggested embeddings allow the use of simple linear separators to achieve
decent performance. In addition, we present a convenient way to visualize the
data, which helps to assess the efficiency of different spoofing techniques.
The experimental results show the potential of using multi-channel PMF based
features for the anti-spoofing task, in addition to the benefits of using
diffusion maps both as an analysis tool and as an embedding tool
Recommended from our members
Study of the Term Neonatal Brain Injury with combined Diffuse Optical Tomography and Electroencephalography
This thesis describes the application of combined diffuse optical tomography (DOT) and electroencephalography (EEG) in the investigation of neonatal term brain injury. With hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE) and perinatal stroke being the most frequent contributors to brain injury in the term neonatal population, the first part of the thesis focuses on the description and ongoing requirement for their further investigation. In continuation to that, the characteristics and unique properties of both DOT and EEG are described and explored.
The combination of these two modalities was utilised in elucidating the relationship between neuronal activity and cerebral haemodynamics both in physiological processes as well as in disease, by the infant’s cot side. This work differs to previous studies using near-infrared technologies and EEG, as a denser whole head array was used, offering the potential of 3-dimensional image reconstruction of the cortical haemodynamic events in relation to electro-cortical activity. These methods were applied in the study of critically ill infants presenting with seizures in the first few days of life.
The relevant results are presented in three separate chapters of the thesis. Distinct neurophysiological phenomena such as seizures and burst suppression were detected and studied in association to underlying HIE. On the grounds of a pre-existing pilot study of our research group, distinct prolonged de-oxygenated cortical areas were identified following electrical seizure activity. Further exploration of infants with seizures provided limited supporting evidence. The investigation of burst suppression in HIE led to the first ever identification of repeated, waveform, cortical haemodynamic events in response to bursts of electrical activity with some spatial correlation to regions of brain injury. Further analysis of the low frequencies within the diffuse optical signal in cases of perinatal stroke, showed a consistent interhemispheric difference between the healthy and stroke-affected brain regions.
The limitations, prospects and conclusions are presented in the final chapter. The use of simultaneous DOT and EEG offers a unique neuro-monitoring and neuro-investigating tool in the neonatal intensive care environment, which is safe, portable, and cost-effective, Ongoing research is required for the exploration and development of the methodology and its potential diagnostic properties
7 T renal MRI: challenges and promises
The progression to 7 Tesla (7 T) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) yields promises of substantial increase in signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio. This increase can be traded off to increase image spatial resolution or to decrease acquisition time. However, renal 7 T MRI remains challenging due to inhomogeneity of the radiofrequency field and due to specific absorption rate (SAR) constraints. A number of studies has been published in the field of renal 7 T imaging. While the focus initially was on anatomic imaging and renal MR angiography, later studies have explored renal functional imaging. Although anatomic imaging remains somewhat limited by inhomogeneous excitation and SAR constraints, functional imaging results are promising. The increased SNR at 7 T has been particularly advantageous for blood oxygen level-dependent and arterial spin labelling MRI, as well as sodium MR imaging, thanks to changes in field-strength-dependent magnetic properties. Here, we provide an overview of the currently available literature on renal 7 T MRI. In addition, we provide a brief overview of challenges and opportunities in renal 7 T MR imaging
Respiratory organ motion in interventional MRI : tracking, guiding and modeling
Respiratory organ motion is one of the major challenges in interventional MRI, particularly in interventions with therapeutic ultrasound in the abdominal region. High-intensity focused ultrasound found an application in interventional MRI for noninvasive treatments of different abnormalities. In order to guide surgical and treatment interventions, organ motion imaging and modeling is commonly required before a treatment start. Accurate tracking of organ motion during various interventional MRI procedures is prerequisite for a successful outcome and safe therapy.
In this thesis, an attempt has been made to develop approaches using focused ultrasound which could be used in future clinically for the treatment of abdominal organs, such as the liver and the kidney. Two distinct methods have been presented with its ex vivo and in vivo treatment results. In the first method, an MR-based pencil-beam navigator has been used to track organ motion and provide the motion information for acoustic focal point steering, while in the second approach a hybrid imaging using both ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging was combined for advanced guiding capabilities.
Organ motion modeling and four-dimensional imaging of organ motion is increasingly required before the surgical interventions. However, due to the current safety limitations and hardware restrictions, the MR acquisition of a time-resolved sequence of volumetric images is not possible with high temporal and spatial resolution. A novel multislice acquisition scheme that is based on a two-dimensional navigator, instead of a commonly used pencil-beam navigator, was devised to acquire the data slices and the corresponding navigator simultaneously using a CAIPIRINHA parallel imaging method. The acquisition duration for four-dimensional dataset sampling is reduced compared to the existing approaches, while the image contrast and quality are improved as well.
Tracking respiratory organ motion is required in interventional procedures and during MR imaging of moving organs. An MR-based navigator is commonly used, however, it is usually associated with image artifacts, such as signal voids. Spectrally selective navigators can come in handy in cases where the imaging organ is surrounding with an adipose tissue, because it can provide an indirect measure of organ motion. A novel spectrally selective navigator based on a crossed-pair navigator has been developed. Experiments show the advantages of the application of this novel navigator for the volumetric imaging of the liver in vivo, where this navigator was used to gate the gradient-recalled echo sequence
3次元アトムプローブ法を用いたシリコンデバイス中の不純物分布のナノスケール分析
Tohoku University永井康介課
- …